1 / 6

Comparability: Issues and Experiences

Comparability: Issues and Experiences. Examples of Changes Recombinant Therapeutic Enzyme Production. Post Phase 3 Composition of seed train cell culture medium Post Marketing Bioreactor operations (dO 2 and temperature set-points, perfusion strategy)

kynthia
Download Presentation

Comparability: Issues and Experiences

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Comparability: Issues and Experiences

  2. Examples of ChangesRecombinant Therapeutic Enzyme Production • Post Phase 3 • Composition of seed train cell culture medium • Post Marketing • Bioreactor operations (dO2 and temperature set-points, perfusion strategy) • Bioreactor hardware (number and type of impellers, liquid level control system) • Chromatography column diameters • Cell separation filter train • Intermediate pH adjustment step (temperature control, titrant composition, modified filter train)

  3. Components of a Successful Approach • Upfront discussion with FDA • Agreement with agency on nature of changes and expected level of characterization • Bundle proposed changes when appropriate • Internal assessment of each change and how they may interrelate • Understand the economic benefit associated with a given change. • Assess impact upstream changes may have on downstream steps and intermediates • Impurity clearance (i.e. host cell protein, DNA, virus) • Need for re-validation and/or comparability of a specific intermediate

  4. Commitment to Thorough Characterization • Goes beyond the scope of release testing • It is essential to already understand your protein. • Enzyme kinetics (KM and kcat) • Receptor binding kinetics • Stability profiles under specific/extreme conditions • Degradation profiles in response to various challenges • Allows for the design of relevant characterization assays. • Understand the challenges that may be associated with the use of “research” assays • Used infrequently, may be outsourced, usually not validated • i.e. analytical ultra-centrifugation to evaluate aggregates

  5. Timing • Depends on the motivation for process change • Act sooner if related to supply chain: • Capacity: difficulty meeting market demand • Robustness or reproducibility problems • More flexibility exists if driver is purely economic • Still need to assess impact to supply chain • In some cases multi-product considerations are warranted • Timing is also dependent on how many regions the product is approved in. • US, Europe, Japan, and ROW.

  6. Key Issue Yet to be Addressed • Need for a harmonized process • A proposed change is a variation in Europe, while it may be a pre-approved comparability protocol in US. • Creates a strategic issue when considering process changes for a product distributed to multiple regions.

More Related